TY - JOUR
T1 - Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Emotion Expressive Humanoid Robotic Head
T2 - Recognition of Facial Expressions and Symbols
AU - Trovato, Gabriele
AU - Kishi, Tatsuhiro
AU - Endo, Nobutsuna
AU - Zecca, Massimiliano
AU - Hashimoto, Kenji
AU - Takanishi, Atsuo
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgements This study was conducted as part of the Research Institute for Science and Engineering, Waseda University, and as part of the humanoid project at the Humanoid Robotics Institute, Waseda University. It was supported in part by RoboSoM project from the European FP7 program (Grant agreement No. 248366), GCOE Program “Global Robot Academia” from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan, SolidWorks Japan K.K., NiKKi Fron Co., Chukoh Chemical Industries, STMicroelectronics, and DYDEN Corporation, whom we thank for their financial and technical support.
PY - 2013/11
Y1 - 2013/11
N2 - Emotion display through facial expressions is an important channel of communication. However, between humans there are differences in the way a meaning to facial cues is assigned, depending on the background culture. This leads to a gap in recognition rates of expressions: this problem is present when displaying a robotic face too, as a robot's facial expression recognition is often hampered by a cultural divide, and poor scores of recognition rate may lead to poor acceptance and interaction. It would be desirable if robots could switch their output facial configuration flexibly, adapting to different cultural backgrounds. To achieve this, we made a generation system that produces facial expressions and applied it to the 24 degrees of freedom head of the humanoid social robot KOBIAN-R, and thanks to the work of illustrators and cartoonists, the system can generate two versions of the same expression, in order to be easily recognisable by both Japanese and Western subjects. As a tool for making recognition easier, the display of Japanese comic symbols on the robotic face has also been introduced and evaluated. In this work, we conducted a cross-cultural study aimed at assessing this gap in recognition and finding solutions for it. The investigation was extended to Egyptian subjects too, as a sample of another different culture. Results confirmed the differences in recognition rates, the effectiveness of customising expressions, and the usefulness of symbols display, thereby suggesting that this approach might be valuable for robots that in the future will interact in a multi-cultural environment.
AB - Emotion display through facial expressions is an important channel of communication. However, between humans there are differences in the way a meaning to facial cues is assigned, depending on the background culture. This leads to a gap in recognition rates of expressions: this problem is present when displaying a robotic face too, as a robot's facial expression recognition is often hampered by a cultural divide, and poor scores of recognition rate may lead to poor acceptance and interaction. It would be desirable if robots could switch their output facial configuration flexibly, adapting to different cultural backgrounds. To achieve this, we made a generation system that produces facial expressions and applied it to the 24 degrees of freedom head of the humanoid social robot KOBIAN-R, and thanks to the work of illustrators and cartoonists, the system can generate two versions of the same expression, in order to be easily recognisable by both Japanese and Western subjects. As a tool for making recognition easier, the display of Japanese comic symbols on the robotic face has also been introduced and evaluated. In this work, we conducted a cross-cultural study aimed at assessing this gap in recognition and finding solutions for it. The investigation was extended to Egyptian subjects too, as a sample of another different culture. Results confirmed the differences in recognition rates, the effectiveness of customising expressions, and the usefulness of symbols display, thereby suggesting that this approach might be valuable for robots that in the future will interact in a multi-cultural environment.
KW - Communication
KW - Culture
KW - Emotion expression
KW - Facial expressions
KW - Human-Robot Interaction
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U2 - 10.1007/s12369-013-0213-z
DO - 10.1007/s12369-013-0213-z
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84886790451
SN - 1875-4791
VL - 5
SP - 515
EP - 527
JO - International Journal of Social Robotics
JF - International Journal of Social Robotics
IS - 4
ER -